Where Ya Goin', Owen?

Where Ya Goin', Owen?

Author: Craig t. Ortiz

Publisher: Page Publishing Inc

Published: 2020-11-24

Total Pages: 27

ISBN-13: 1684565286

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Where Ya Goin’, Owen? is a nice bedtime and or easy-reading, rhyming story from a mother’s point of view to her son on the quirks of growing up. It helps teach not only rhyming but numbers as well, and when read with a certain flow, it can be enjoyed by not only young ones and adults but young ones and adults together as well. I hope you enjoy it!


Where Ya Goin'?

Where Ya Goin'?

Author: Steve Heron

Publisher:

Published: 2021-08

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780648161189

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Where is Echidna going in his rickety old bus with a big bag of marshmallows? He's off to find his Aussie friends, Galah playing guitar and Emu cooking up a brew, to name a few! Children will laugh with the fun storytelling and hilarious illustrations. 'Where Ya Goinn'?' ... a celebration of togetherness and friendship. Wild Eyed Press totally supports the concept paying royalties for the use of manuscripts and artworks. Wild Eyed Press sees this as both a moral and intellectual obligation. When you read this book, you can do so with the knowledge that it was fully created by real people for real people. Creators affiliated with Wild Eyed Press sign contracts to say they do not use Artificial intelligence when illustrating or writing children's books for your child. Written and illustrated by real people for real children. Our creators care about literacy and child welfare. They support you, please support them.


J's Sorrow

J's Sorrow

Author: Jessie A. Snow

Publisher: AuthorHouse

Published: 2008-06-12

Total Pages: 404

ISBN-13: 146783078X

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This is the third in a series entitled El’Atone’s Journals. El’Atone’ must run from the Vampyre Council as the fulfillment of a prophecy calls for her death. She, her husband and friends face death on multiple occasions in their attempt to live normal lives. They must outwit those hunting for them and those willing to protect them at a price. Their journeys lead them from country to country as they must move about to keep from being captured. Her foes include a man with the ability to travel in dreams, her father a former vampyre hit man, and her friends who betray her for money. Her allies, a member of the council and an eight-hundred year old psychic vampyre.


Fifty Cents for Your Soul

Fifty Cents for Your Soul

Author: Denise Dietz

Publisher: Delphi Books

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 294

ISBN-13: 9780966339758

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Frannie Rosen's psychic mentions a brilliant future, but she never tells the straight-laced and naive Frannie that she will be possessed by a promiscuous doppelganger. All Frannie wants is an Oscar-winning role. What she gets is far more than that, especially when she's cast in a horror film about demonic possession directed by the legendary Victor Madison. Victor Madison is universally and deservedly hated. His murder surprises no one but Frannie; his murderer is a surprise to everyone but Frannie. Frannie's irreverent adventures were inspired, in part, by mysterious events that plagued the filming of The Exorcist. Available April 2002.


Conversation with the Blues CD Included

Conversation with the Blues CD Included

Author: Paul Oliver

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 1997-09-25

Total Pages: 252

ISBN-13: 9780521591812

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First published in 1965 by Cassell and Co, this classic and unique text in blues history, Conversation with the Blues has now been re-issued in a new, larger format. The book takes a slice across blues traditions of all kinds, which were still thriving side by side in 1960. Compiled from transcriptions of interviews with blues singers made by Paul Oliver in 1960, the book tells in the singers' own words of the significance of their music and the turbulent lives it reflects. It is accompanied by a fascinating CD, slipcased on the inside back cover of the book, which captures the stark, ironic but moving narratives of the singers themselves. Included are guitarists, pianists and other instrumentalists from the rural South and the urban North, from famous blues singers who recorded extensively to singers known only to their local communities. Copiously illustrated with Paul Oliver's photographs, the book provides a rare glimpse of African American music at a time when the South was still segregated.


Gift of Sydney

Gift of Sydney

Author: D. Manning Richards

Publisher: Aries Books

Published: 2014-10

Total Pages: 360

ISBN-13: 0984541039

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GIFT OF SYDNEY is an epic novel of the struggle to forge the multicultural, world-class city of Sydney, Australia. It is the second in the series of novels about the history of the city and Australia. In 1903, the wealthy and powerful Armstrongs are concerned about their "convict stain." The Fongs rail against the White Australia Policy that is driving Chinese out of Australia and preventing their relatives from immigrating. The Hudsons suffer under government programs that manage them as part of the vexing "Aboriginal problem." The country is rich from wool and gold but insecure. Its principal protector and trading partner, Britain, is 15,000 miles away. The three families all suffer in the world wars and the Great Depression, but experience a profound change when the racist White Australia Policy is finally rejected and a humanitarian policy opens the doors to accept the desperate Vietnamese boat people. Once again, Richards's storytelling is impeccably researched, fast paced, action-adventure driven, and full of family saga emotion and drama. His two extraordinary novels together have the authenticity and authority of the finest historical fiction that strike a resounding chord of hope for all humanity.


HellFire

HellFire

Author: Mia Gallagher

Publisher: Penguin UK

Published: 2007-05-31

Total Pages: 710

ISBN-13: 0141905069

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On a midsummer’s evening a young Dublin woman, Lucy Dolan, prepares for a showdown that will help make sense of a heart-breaking and brutal atrocity that happened thirteen years earlier, changing her life forever. As she waits for the arrival of the charismatic figure who is the key to the mystery, she recounts her life story – a rich and extraordinary tale spanning two generations of storytellers and deal-makers, fortune-tellers and gamblers, businessmen and warlords, and the people that feared, served and betrayed them. With each twist of this tumultuous story Lucy revisits her childhood and early adolescence – trying to get her head around the things people do in the name of love and hate, greed and desire – and she pieces together afresh the events that led to the night that still haunts her.


African Banjo Echoes in Appalachia

African Banjo Echoes in Appalachia

Author: Cecelia Conway

Publisher: Univ. of Tennessee Press

Published: 1995

Total Pages: 428

ISBN-13: 9780870498930

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Throughout the Upland South, the banjo has become an emblem of white mountain folk, who are generally credited with creating the short-thumb-string banjo, developing its downstroking playing styles and repertory, and spreading its influence to the national consciousness. In this groundbreaking study, however, Cecelia Conway demonstrates that these European Americans borrowed the banjo from African Americans and adapted it to their own musical culture. Like many aspects of the African-American tradition, the influence of black banjo music has been largely unrecorded and nearly forgotten--until now. Drawing in part on interviews with elderly African-American banjo players from the Piedmont--among the last American representatives of an African banjo-playing tradition that spans several centuries--Conway reaches beyond the written records to reveal the similarity of pre-blues black banjo lyric patterns, improvisational playing styles, and the accompanying singing and dance movements to traditional West African music performances. The author then shows how Africans had, by the mid-eighteenth century, transformed the lyrical music of the gourd banjo as they dealt with the experience of slavery in America. By the mid-nineteenth century, white southern musicians were learning the banjo playing styles of their African-American mentors and had soon created or popularized a five-string, wooden-rim banjo. Some of these white banjo players remained in the mountain hollows, but others dispersed banjo music to distant musicians and the American public through popular minstrel shows. By the turn of the century, traditional black and white musicians still shared banjo playing, and Conway shows that this exchange gave rise to a distinct and complex new genre--the banjo song. Soon, however, black banjo players put down their banjos, set their songs with increasingly assertive commentary to the guitar, and left the banjo and its story to white musicians. But the banjo still echoed at the crossroads between the West African griots, the traveling country guitar bluesmen, the banjo players of the old-time southern string bands, and eventually the bluegrass bands. The Author: Cecelia Conway is associate professor of English at Appalachian State University. She is a folklorist who teaches twentieth-century literature, including cultural perspectives, southern literature, and film.


Folktales of Newfoundland Pbdirect

Folktales of Newfoundland Pbdirect

Author: J.D.A. Widdowson

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2015-02-20

Total Pages: 878

ISBN-13: 1317551486

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This collection of Newfoundland folk narratives, first published in 1996, grew out of extensive fieldwork in folk culture in the province. The intention was to collect as broad a spectrum of traditional material as possible, and Folktales of Newfoundland is notable not only for the number and quality of its narratives, but also for the format in which they are presented. A special transcription system conveys to the reader the accents and rhythms of each performance, and the endnote to each tale features an analysis of the narrator’s language. In addition, Newfoundland has preserved many aspects of English and Irish folk tradition, some of which are no longer active in the countries of their origin. Working from the premise that traditions virtually unknown in England might still survive in active form in Newfoundland, the researchers set out to discover if this was in fact the case.


Hope's Highway

Hope's Highway

Author: Dorothy Garlock

Publisher: Hachette+ORM

Published: 2008-10-23

Total Pages: 268

ISBN-13: 0446549118

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The Voice of America's Heartland, national bestselling author Dorothy Garlock, delivers the second novel in her evocative, Depression-era trilogy.Ernie Harding may have stolen Margie Kinnard's savings, but he didn't shatter her dreams of going to California to become a movie star. Help arrives from an unexpected source: Margie's long lost father.